July 2012 Intelligence News

Anti-leak measure targets background briefings by Greg Miller, Washington Post, July 31. "An anti-leak measure approved by a key Senate committee would all but eliminate a long-standing practice in Washington in which senior intelligence analysts occasionally provide what are known as background briefings for reporters."

FDA isn't the only agency snooping in e-mail by Joe Davidson, Washington Post, July 18. "With the Food and Drug Administration's surveillance of its staff, perhaps 'FDA' should stand for the Federal Detective Administration. Actually, that could be an umbrella agency charged with coordinating all government programs that spy on federal employees. It would be an agency with a list of operations longer than many people realize."

National Reconnaissance Office accused of illegally collecting personal data by Marisa Taylor, McClatchy News, July 10. "One of the nation's most secretive intelligence agencies is pressuring its polygraphers to obtain intimate details of the private lives of thousands of job applicants and employees, pushing the ethical and legal boundaries of a program that's designed instead to catch spies and terrorists."

Growing costs of keeping secrets: Almost 30 percent jump in 3 years by Sean Reilly, Federal Times, July 8. "The price tag for protecting government secrets is soaring. In fiscal 2011, executive branch agencies spent $11.4 billion on classified information systems, physical security and other safeguards, up 12 percent from 2010 and almost 30 percent over 2009, according to a new government report."

Feds Look to Fight Leaks With 'Fog of Disinformation' by Noah Shachtman, Wired Danger Room, July 3. "Pentagon-funded researchers have come up with a new plan for busting leakers: Spot them by how they search, and then entice the secret-spillers with decoy documents that will give them away."

Cost to Protect U.S. Secrets Doubles to Over $11 Billion by Scott Shane, New York Times, July 3. "The federal government spent more than $11 billion to protect its secrets last year, double the cost of classification a decade ago -- and that is only the part it will reveal. The total does not include the costs incurred by the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency and other spy agencies, whose spending is -- you guessed it -- classified. "